US8089281B2 - Doubly resonant high field radio frequency surface coils for magnetic resonance - Google Patents
Doubly resonant high field radio frequency surface coils for magnetic resonance Download PDFInfo
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- US8089281B2 US8089281B2 US12/528,541 US52854108A US8089281B2 US 8089281 B2 US8089281 B2 US 8089281B2 US 52854108 A US52854108 A US 52854108A US 8089281 B2 US8089281 B2 US 8089281B2
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- 238000002595 magnetic resonance imaging Methods 0.000 description 3
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01R—MEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
- G01R33/00—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
- G01R33/20—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
- G01R33/28—Details of apparatus provided for in groups G01R33/44 - G01R33/64
- G01R33/32—Excitation or detection systems, e.g. using radio frequency signals
- G01R33/36—Electrical details, e.g. matching or coupling of the coil to the receiver
- G01R33/3628—Tuning/matching of the transmit/receive coil
- G01R33/3635—Multi-frequency operation
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01R—MEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
- G01R33/00—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
- G01R33/20—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
- G01R33/28—Details of apparatus provided for in groups G01R33/44 - G01R33/64
- G01R33/32—Excitation or detection systems, e.g. using radio frequency signals
- G01R33/34—Constructional details, e.g. resonators, specially adapted to MR
- G01R33/341—Constructional details, e.g. resonators, specially adapted to MR comprising surface coils
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01R—MEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
- G01R33/00—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
- G01R33/20—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
- G01R33/28—Details of apparatus provided for in groups G01R33/44 - G01R33/64
- G01R33/32—Excitation or detection systems, e.g. using radio frequency signals
- G01R33/36—Electrical details, e.g. matching or coupling of the coil to the receiver
- G01R33/3678—Electrical details, e.g. matching or coupling of the coil to the receiver involving quadrature drive or detection, e.g. a circularly polarized RF magnetic field
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01R—MEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
- G01R33/00—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
- G01R33/20—Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
- G01R33/28—Details of apparatus provided for in groups G01R33/44 - G01R33/64
- G01R33/32—Excitation or detection systems, e.g. using radio frequency signals
- G01R33/34—Constructional details, e.g. resonators, specially adapted to MR
- G01R33/34007—Manufacture of RF coils, e.g. using printed circuit board technology; additional hardware for providing mechanical support to the RF coil assembly or to part thereof, e.g. a support for moving the coil assembly relative to the remainder of the MR system
Definitions
- the following relates to the magnetic resonance arts. It finds particular application in magnetic resonance imaging at high magnetic fields (e.g., about 3 Tesla or higher), and is described with particular reference thereto. However, the following finds more general application in magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and the like performed at substantially any magnetic field.
- Surface coils are known and used in the magnetic resonance arts to excite or detect magnetic resonance in a localized region of a subject.
- Surface coils typically include a single annular conductive loop or an array of planar conductive loops positioned close to the region of interest of a subject.
- An electric current driven through the single annular conductive loop or loops arrangement generates a B 1 field oriented transverse to B 0 field and the plane of the coil loop or loops.
- a B 1 field oriented transverse to the B 0 field and the plane of the coil loop or loops induces an electric current in the coil loop or loops that can be used to detect magnetic resonance.
- the butterfly or figure-eight surface coil is also known.
- This coil produces a B 1 field oriented transverse to B 0 field and parallel to the plane of the surface coil.
- one or more such surface coils are placed close to or on a patient or other subject, such that the close proximity of the surface coil or coils enhances radio frequency coupling and magnetic resonance signal strength.
- loop surface coils operate in a uniform resonance mode in which the B 1 field is oriented transverse to the coil plane. Such a loop coil is most effective when oriented such that the static B 0 magnetic field is in the plane of the surface coil, so as to maximize the angle between the B 0 and B 1 fields.
- birdcage and TEM coils are generally cylindrical volume coils that couple with an interior region surrounded by the birdcage or TEM coil and are oriented with their axis generally aligned with the B 0 field. Hence, these coils are not suitable for use as surface coils.
- a generally planar surface coil comprising one or two annular conductors arranged generally parallel with a coil plane of the generally planar radio frequency coil and configured to support (i) a uniform electrical current distribution generating a first B 1 field at a first magnetic resonance frequency directed out of the coil plane, and (ii) a sinusoidal electrical current distribution generating a second B 1 field at a second magnetic resonance frequency directed parallel with the coil plane.
- a radio frequency coil comprising an annular conductor configured to support: (i) a uniform electrical current distribution generating a first B 1 field at a first magnetic resonance frequency directed out of a plane of the annular conductor; and (ii) a sinusoidal electrical current distribution generating a second B 1 field at a second magnetic resonance frequency directed parallel with the plane of the annular conductor.
- a magnetic resonance scanner comprising: a magnet generating a static magnetic field; a magnetic field gradient system configured to superimpose selected magnetic field gradients on the static magnetic field; and an annular conductor configured to support a sinusoidal electrical current distribution generating or induced by a B 1 field at a magnetic resonance frequency directed parallel with the plane of the annular conductor.
- One advantage resides in obtaining a dual resonance from a single surface coil.
- Another advantage resides in facilitating the use of fewer surface coils during magnetic resonance data acquisition.
- Another advantage resides in providing a quadrature surface coil.
- Another advantage resides in providing a doubly-tuned surface coil for multi-nuclear magnetic resonance data acquisitions.
- FIG. 1 diagrammatically shows a magnetic resonance scanner including a surface coil configured to support both uniform and sinusoid resonances at the same or at different magnetic resonance frequencies.
- FIG. 2 plots sinusoidal resonance frequency for a continuous unshielded circular annular conductor without intervening capacitance or inductance elements, as a function of radius of the circular annular conductor.
- FIG. 3 diagrammatically shows the uniform resonance mode of the annular conductor of the surface coil of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 4 diagrammatically shows the sinusoidal resonance mode of the annular conductor of the surface coil of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 5 diagrammatically shows a side sectional view of one embodiment of the surface coil of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 6 diagrammatically shows a plan view of an embodiment of the surface coil of FIG. 1 that includes a continuous closed-loop microstrip transmission line annular conductor.
- FIG. 7 diagrammatically shows a plan view of an embodiment of the surface coil of FIG. 1 that includes a segmented closed-loop microstrip transmission line annular conductor having gaps defining discrete capacitance elements.
- FIG. 8 diagrammatically shows a plan view of an embodiment of the surface coil of FIG. 1 that includes a segmented closed-loop microstrip transmission line annular conductor having gaps defining capacitance elements, further including series inductor elements.
- FIG. 9 diagrammatically shows a plan view of a generally planar radio frequency coil that includes two parallel segmented closed-loop microstrip transmission line annular conductors each having gaps defining capacitance elements, one of which further includes series inductor elements.
- FIGS. 10 and 11 diagrammatically show side sectional and perspective views, respectively, of an embodiment of the surface coil of FIG. 1 that includes an annular conductor shielded by both a planar radio frequency shield and by a transverse annular shield portion.
- FIG. 12 plots calculated transverse B 1 field versus frequency at a point 10 centimeters above a 15-centimeter radius circular annular conductor for (i) an unshielded annular conductor (“ring-only”); (ii) an annular conductor shielded by a planar radio frequency shield (“ring+planar shield”); and (iii) an annular conductor shielded by both a planar radio frequency shield and by a transverse annular shield portion (“ring+planar shield+transverse annular shield portion”).
- an illustrative bore-type magnetic resonance scanner 8 includes a magnet 10 generating a static magnetic field B 0 oriented parallel with a bore opening 12 of the scanner 8 .
- the magnet 10 can be a superconducting or resistive magnet. Other geometries besides the illustrated horizontal bore geometry can be implemented.
- the magnetic resonance scanner 8 further includes a magnetic field gradient system 14 configured to superimpose selected magnetic field gradients on the static magnetic field B 0 .
- the magnetic field gradient system 14 includes windings for selectively generating three orthogonal magnetic field gradients, for example along orthogonal designated x-, y-, and z-directions.
- the magnetic field gradient system is disposed inside of the magnet, as the illustrated magnetic field gradient system 14 is disposed inside of the illustrated magnet 10 ; however, other configurations are also contemplated, such as an arrangement disclosed in Overweg, Int'l Appl. No. WO 2005/124381 in which the gradient coil windings are disposed outside of the magnet and the generated magnetic field gradients are coupled into the bore opening by a ferromagnetic yoke.
- the magnet 10 and magnetic field gradient system 14 are diagrammatically shown as transparent to reveal the interior of the bore opening 12 .
- one or more radio frequency coils such as an illustrative birdcage-type whole-body coil 18 integrated into the scanner 8 , or a transverse electromagnetic (TEM) coil (not shown), or a surface coil 20 , or the like, is energized by a suitable radio frequency signal at one or more magnetic resonance frequencies to excite magnetic resonance in one or more nuclear species, such as the 1 H, 13 C, 31 P, 23 Na, 19 F, or other nuclear species.
- One or more magnetic field gradients are typically applied by the magnetic field gradient system 14 to spatially limit and/or encode the excited magnetic resonance or resonances.
- the excited magnetic resonances are read out by one or more of the radio frequency coils 18 , 20 .
- the readout or receive coil may be the same or different from the radio frequency coil used for excitation.
- the surface coil 20 includes an annular conductor 22 configured to support: (i) a uniform electrical current distribution generating a first, B 1,uniform field at a first magnetic resonance frequency directed out of a plane of the annular conductor 22 ; and (ii) a sinusoidal electrical current distribution generating a second, B 1,sine magnetic field at a second magnetic resonance frequency directed parallel with the plane of the annular conductor 22 .
- This dual-mode configuration advantageously allows the surface coil 20 to be used as a doubly-tuned surface coil if the first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are different.
- An example of an application of such a doubly-tuned surface coil is multi-nuclear magnetic resonance imaging or spectroscopy, in which the first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are suitably magnetic resonance frequencies of different nuclear species in a given static magnetic field B 0 .
- FIG. 1 also diagrammatically shows an annular conductor 22 ′ that is similar to the annular conductor 20 , but is oriented with the axis of the annular conductor 22 ′ parallel with the static magnetic field B 0 .
- the direction of the B 0 field is transverse to the plane of the annular conductor 22 ′.
- the annular conductor 22 ′ can be used as a quadrature transmit/receive coil by exciting it using two sinusoidal modes that are phase-shifted by 90° at the same magnetic resonance frequency.
- the illustrated annular conductor 22 ′ suitably supports B 1,sine and B 1,cos fields. This dual-mode configuration advantageously allows the surface coil 20 to be used as a quadrature surface coil.
- the sinusoidal mode of a continuous unshielded annular conductor has not been considered to be of value for magnetic resonance imaging or spectroscopy, because the resonance frequency was deemed to be too high and the generated B 1 field was deemed to be too non-uniform.
- the inventors have recognized that for high-field magnetic resonance and for an annular conductor of sufficiently large radius, the sinusoidal mode oscillates at a useful frequency range matching certain magnetic resonance frequencies of interest.
- the 1 H magnetic resonance frequency is 298 MHz in a static magnetic field B 0 of 7 Tesla. As indicated in FIG.
- the sinusoidal resonance of a circular annular conductor having a reasonable diameter of about 32 centimeters closely matches this 1 H magnetic resonance frequency.
- the inventors have recognized that at higher magnetic field, the spatial uniformity is largely determined by the dielectric and conductive characteristics of the patient or other subject loading the coil; hence, at static B 0 magnetic field values greater than 3 Tesla, the relatively large unloaded non-uniformity of the B 1,sine field is acceptable.
- the uniform oscillation mode of the annular conductor 22 of the surface coil 20 of FIG. 1 is illustrated.
- the current distribution is uniform around the annular conductor 22 .
- This mode does not require a circular annulus, and is typically tuned using capacitance elements in the conductor.
- the B 1 field generated by the current depends on position with respect to the loop.
- the reference direction is counterclockwise; however, the uniform current distribution oscillates temporally between clockwise and counterclockwise at the first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform oscillation.
- the uniform current distribution produces a B 1,uniform field directed transverse to or out of the plane of the annular conductor 22 .
- the illustrated B 1,uniform field is directed out of the page of the paper corresponding to the counterclockwise reference direction of the uniform current distribution.
- FIG. 4 shows the sinusoidal oscillation mode of the annular conductor 22 of the surface coil 20 of FIG. 1 .
- the current distribution around the circular annular conductor 22 is sinusoidal with a spatial period equal to the circumference of the annular conductor 22 . Accordingly, at the resonance frequency where the current distribution wavelength coincides with the ring circumference there are two current distribution nulls, one maximum positive current amplitude point, and one maximum negative current amplitude point.
- the two current distribution nulls are positioned at points designated as 0° and 180°, the maximum positive current amplitude (+I max ) point is at 90°, and the maximum negative current amplitude point ( ⁇ I max ) is at 270°.
- the resulting B 1,sine field is directed parallel with the plane of the annular conductor 22 .
- the configuration of the annular conductor 22 of the surface coil 20 is such as to support both the uniform and sinusoidal oscillations current modes and their associated magnetic fields simultaneously.
- the same surface coil 20 can be used to simultaneously generate or detect B 1 fields at both the first and second magnetic resonance frequencies. If the first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are different, the surface coil 20 can be used to excite or acquire multi-nuclear magnetic resonance simultaneously.
- FIG. 5 shows one suitable implementation of the surface coil 20 , in which the annular conductor 22 is configured as an annular microstrip transmission line on a generally planar dielectric substrate 24 .
- a ground plane 26 or other planar radio frequency shield is arranged parallel with the annular conductor 22 disposed on a side of the dielectric substrate 24 opposite the annular conductor 22 .
- the presence of the shield 26 advantageously boosts the Q factor of the coil.
- the annular conductor 22 and the ground plane 26 are suitably lithographically or otherwise patterned or selectively deposited conductive films.
- the ground plane 26 is an annular ground plane; however, a disk-shaped or other larger-area ground plane or radio frequency shield can be used instead.
- a ground plane can be used that covers the backside of the dielectric substrate 24 but is suitably segmented to reduce gradient induced eddy currents, yet appears continuous at radio frequency via capacitive connections.
- FIG. 5 also indicates certain geometrical parameters that affect the tuning of the coil, such as the annular conductor diameter D, the thickness H of the dielectric substrate 24 , and the width W of the annular conductor 22 .
- the designation of diameter D for the annular conductor 22 assumes a circular configuration for the annular conductor.
- the annular conductor is contemplated to deviate somewhat from perfect circularity, and may for example be somewhat elliptical or so forth. However, substantial deviation from circularity is generally disadvantageous in that it can adversely affect uniformity of the B 1,sine field. It should also be noted that the diameter D corresponds to twice the radius, i.e. 2R, as also indicated in FIG. 5 .
- FIGS. 6-8 show plan views of various surface coil embodiments each employing the cross-sectional configuration of FIG. 5 .
- the dielectric substrate 24 is not shown, so that the annular conductor is seen on top of the ground plane 26 .
- the dielectric substrate 24 may be opaque, transparent, or translucent.
- the annular conductor is a continuous closed annular conductor 22 a .
- the first uniform mode is absent and only the second sinusoidal mode is useable.
- the tuning of the sinusoidal mode is through the parameters D, W, and H. This makes it difficult to fine-tune the sinusoidal mode; however, in some cases a suitable geometry can be obtained to achieve a specific selected magnetic resonance frequency value.
- the annular conductor 22 a is referred to herein as a closed annular conductor, it is to be appreciated that the closed annular conductor 22 a may include a gap (not shown) in the annular conductor in order to feed the coil with a suitably-coupled source such as a capacitively coupled source.
- the annular conductor is a broken annular conductor 22 b , having (in the illustrated example) eight gaps 30 .
- the gaps 30 define capacitive elements that affect the first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform mode more than the second magnetic resonance frequency of the sinusoidal mode.
- the second magnetic resonance frequency corresponding to the sinusoidal mode is suitably selected by designing the parameters D, W, dielectric constant ⁇ r and thickness H, and the capacitance elements 30 are selected to adjust the first magnetic resonance frequency corresponding to the uniform mode.
- gaps 30 in a microstrip transmission line conductor 22 b define the capacitance values of the capacitance elements in the embodiment of FIG. 7 , in other embodiments discrete capacitors may be used.
- geometric design parameters D, W, ⁇ r and H. affect both the first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform mode and the second magnetic resonance frequency of the sinusoidal mode.
- the tuning design is suitably performed in conjunction with an electromagnetic simulator, by iteratively adjusting the capacitance values and one or more parameters of D, W, ⁇ r and H until the desired first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are achieved.
- the annular conductor is again a broken annular conductor 22 c , having (in the illustrated example) eight gaps 30 defining capacitive elements that affect the first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform mode more than the second magnetic resonance frequency of the sinusoidal mode.
- series inductive elements 32 such as discrete inductors, are included.
- the inductive elements 32 affect the second magnetic resonance frequency of the sinusoidal mode more than the first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform mode.
- the geometric design parameters D, W, ⁇ r and H can be first determined for best fit to a loading subject.
- the tuning design is then suitably performed in conjunction with an electromagnetic simulator, by iteratively adjusting the inductance and capacitance values until the desired first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are achieved.
- the surface coil of FIG. 9 includes the annular conductor 22 c and also includes an additional concentric and co-planar annular conductor 22 d .
- annular conductor 22 d is of a slightly smaller radius than the annular conductor 22 c .
- the annular conductors 22 c , 22 d have similar topologies including eight gaps in each annular conductor, and the ground plane 26 provides shielding for both annular conductors 22 c , 22 d .
- Capacitive elements are used to tune one annular conductor to a first magnetic resonance frequency of the uniform mode.
- Series inductive elements such as discrete inductors, are used to tune the other annular conductor to a second magnetic resonance frequency of the sinusoidal mode.
- the uniform mode is used for one of the loops at a lower multi-nuclear frequency and a sinusoidal mode is used for the other loop at a higher frequency, such as the 1 H frequency.
- the surface coil of FIG. 9 is driven in quadrature with both annular conductors 22 c , 22 d resonating at the same frequency.
- the inner annular conductor 22 d is driven via a port P 1 while the outer annular conductor is driven via a port P 2 with a 90° phase shift.
- a generally planar radio frequency coil includes two annular conductors supporting the uniform and sinusoidal current distributions, respectively.
- the two annular conductors may have the same radius, but to be arranged in spaced apart parallel planes.
- Such annular conductors may be either concentric or non-concentric.
- further improved resonance quality can be obtained by having a more enclosing dielectric substrate 34 supporting a more enclosing a radio frequency shield 36 that includes a planar radio frequency shield 36 a , similar to the ground plane 26 , that is disk shaped (as shown) or annular (similar to the ground plane 26 ), and that further includes a transverse annular (short cylinder) radio frequency shield portion 36 b extending transverse to the planar radio frequency shield 36 a and surrounding at least an outer perimeter of the annular conductor 22 . Improvements in the Q are higher when the shield 36 b extends to the upper plane of the annular conductor 22 or further.
- the conductive loop portion 22 can also be attached to the short cylinder 36 b as opposed to the backing disk 36 a .
- the more enclosing dielectric substrate 34 can be omitted, and a self-supporting annular shield portion can be used.
- FIG. 12 plots calculated transverse B 1 field versus frequency at a point 10 centimeters above a 15-centimeter radius circular annular conductor for (i) an unshielded annular conductor (“ring-only”); (ii) an annular conductor shielded by a planar radio frequency shield (“ring+planar shield”); and (iii) an annular conductor shielded by both a planar radio frequency shield and by a transverse annular or short cylindrical shield portion (“ring+planar shield+transverse annular shield portion”).
- ring+planar shield+transverse annular shield portion A substantial narrowing of the resonant peak is obtained for each increase in shielding, i.e.
- a doubly resonant single loop surface coil as described was modeled using electromagnetic modeling software.
- the modeled surface coil included a circular annular conductor similar to that of FIG. 8 and having the cross-section shown in FIG. 5 .
- the modeled coil had eight capacitance elements 30 in series with inductive elements 32 tuned to support a uniform current density at a first magnetic resonance frequency of 120.7 MHz (corresponding to 31 P in a 7 Tesla static B 0 magnetic field) and tuned to support a sinusoidal current density at a second magnetic resonance frequency of 298 MHz (corresponding to 1 H in a 7 Tesla static B 0 magnetic field).
- FIGS. 13 and 14 plot the current distribution magnitude for the uniform mode ( FIG. 13 ) and for the sinusoidal mode ( FIG. 14 ).
- a higher current density magnitude is indicated by a whiter area.
- the uniform mode shows a uniform annular current distribution as expected.
- the sinusoidal mode shows the expected two current distribution nulls, and two current distribution maxima corresponding to +I max and ⁇ I max , again as expected.
- FIG. 15 plots calculated S 11 (that is, reflected power) versus frequency.
- the uniform and sinusoidal modes are clearly seen as sharp negative valleys in the S 11 plot at 120.7 MHz and 298 MHz, respectively.
- FIG. 16 plots calculated
- the plot of FIG. 16 shows a typical ring
- a conventional, uniform current, multi-nuclear surface coil is constructed by combining two or more separate loops resonating at different frequencies.
- the two separate loops can couple with each other unless appropriately trapped and/or geometrically configured to reduce coupling.
- the single doubly-tuned annular conductor is simpler to construct, and includes fewer parts, than a dual coil having separate resonating loops.
- the sinusoidal mode can be fed in quadrature to increase transmit and receive efficiency for 1 H imaging, while the uniform current mode used for the 31 P or other nuclear species is driven linearly. The usefulness of the sinusoidal quadrature drive will depend on the orientation of the coil with respect to the B 0 field.
- the B 1 fields should be generally transverse to the static magnetic field B 0 to maximize the excited or detected magnetic resonance.
- the annular conductor 22 should be arranged such that B 1,uniform is generally transverse to the static magnetic field B 0 .
- the sinusoidal B 1,sine field will substantially be in a plane that includes the z axis aligned with the B 0 field.
- Each of B 1,uniform and B 1,sine will function as a linear coil for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), rather than as a rotating field quadrature coil.
- quadrature operation can be achieved by using two co-planar loops as described with reference to FIG. 9 .
- the loop plane is oriented generally orthogonal to the z axis as is the case for annular loop 22 ′ of FIG. 1 . This orientation also assures that the sinusoidal B 1,sine field is generally transverse to the static magnetic field B 0 . In this orientation a loop B 1,uniform mode is not useful for NMR. It is envisioned that various loop orientations and combinations of modes may be used.
- first and second magnetic resonance frequencies are the same, for example using two co-planar loops, then a total transverse B 1 field is generated which results from the vector sum of the B 1,sine and B 1,uniform fields.
- This transverse field advantageously has less orientation-dependence than does the transverse B 1 field of a conventional surface coil operating only in the uniform mode.
- each coil element may be a generally planar annular conductor, such as the illustrated annular conductors 22 , 22 a , 22 b , 22 c , 22 d , but the coil array made up of a plurality of such generally planar annular conductor elements may have a non-planar shape, such as a body-fitting shape, a cylindrical shape, or so forth.
- generally planar as used herein is intended to encompass generally planar annular conductors that have some bowing or curvature, for example to facilitate arrangement of an array of such generally planar annular conductor elements in a desired torso-fitting, cylindrical, or other non-planar shape.
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Abstract
Description
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FIGS. 13 and 14 plot calculated current distribution along an annular conductor for the uniform and sinusoidal resonance modes, respectively; -
FIG. 15 plots calculated S11 versus frequency; and -
FIG. 16 plots calculated |B1 +|(x) normalized to the value of |B1 +|(x=1 centimeter) versus position along the coil axis direction in an average brain tissue.
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Claims (23)
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US12/528,541 US8089281B2 (en) | 2007-02-26 | 2008-01-30 | Doubly resonant high field radio frequency surface coils for magnetic resonance |
PCT/IB2008/050328 WO2008104895A1 (en) | 2007-02-26 | 2008-01-30 | Doubly resonant high field radio frequency surface coils for magnetic resonance |
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Also Published As
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US20100026303A1 (en) | 2010-02-04 |
RU2009135799A (en) | 2011-04-10 |
EP2115485A1 (en) | 2009-11-11 |
RU2491568C2 (en) | 2013-08-27 |
CN101790693A (en) | 2010-07-28 |
WO2008104895A1 (en) | 2008-09-04 |
EP2620783A1 (en) | 2013-07-31 |
CN101790693B (en) | 2013-12-11 |
JP5461199B2 (en) | 2014-04-02 |
JP2010518936A (en) | 2010-06-03 |
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